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Wen Sun
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Wen Sun

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Biography

Sun Wen (simplified Chinese: 孙雯; traditional Chinese: 孫雯; pinyin: Sūn Wén; born April 6, 1973 in Shanghai) is a retired Chinese professional football (soccer) player. She previously captained the China women's national football team and the Atlanta Beat of the Women's United Soccer Association (WUSA).

In 2000, she won the FIFA Female Player of the Century along with Michelle Akers. Sun won both the Golden Ball (top player) and Golden Boot (top scorer) for her performance at the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup. She is considered one of the all-time greats of the women's game.

Early life

Sun began playing football around the age of ten. Her father, Sun Zonggao, was a recreational football player who took Sun with him to watch matches in the Chinese men's league. Sun credits him for influencing her foray into the sport.

Sun studied Chinese literature at the University of Shanghai.

Playing career

Club

Shanghai SVA

Sun played for the Shanghai team in the Chinese women's league.

Atlanta Beat

Sun played for the Atlanta Beat of the Women's United Soccer Association from 2001-2002.She was the first overall pick of the WUSA's Inaugural Draft, but a knee and ankle injury limited her first season with the Beat to 13 games with five starts. During the league's semifinal match against the Philadelphia Charge, the Beat were down 2-0, however, Sun scored on a penalty kick and then provided the assist on the equalizer goal with a corner kick headed in by Cindy Parlow. The Beat would go on to win the match 3-2. She then notched the Beat's third goal in the Founders Cup helping the team to an eventual 3-3 tie during regulation. The San Jose CyberRays won the title in a penalty kick shootout.

During the 2002 season, Sun played in 18 games, making 10 starts. She scored four goals as the Beat earned another chance at the playoffs, but the Beat were eliminated in the semifinals.

Sun announced her retirement from the WUSA in January 2003 to return to China in preparation for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup.

International

Sun appeared on China's national squad at the age of 17 and went on to appear in four FIFA Women's World Cup tournaments for China and became one of three women to have played all of China's 15 matches in its three World Cup appearances. In 1999, she had 10 goals in her World Cup career, leaving her tied for second place on an all-time scoring list.

Sun helped the national team win the Asian Cup in 1991, 1993, 1995 and 1997.

Sun led China to a silver medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Athens, Georgia. During the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, Sun scored seven goals and earned the Golden Ball (top player) and Golden Boot (top scorer) at the tournament.

She returned to the Chinese women's team from a two-year retirement on December 15, 2005. Due to injury reasons, Sun retired again after winning AFC Women's Asian Cup in 2006.

Matches and goals scored at World Cup and Olympic tournaments

Sun played 28 matches and scored 16 goals in 4 world cup tournaments and 2 Olympics: China 1991, Sweden 1995, Atlanta 1996, USA 1999, Sydney 2000, USA 2003; she played and started every match for China. Sun Wen, with her China teams, won a silver medal at Atlanta 1996 Olympics, and finished second at USA 1999 world cup.

Key (expand for notes on“world cup and olympic goals”)
LocationGeographic location of the venue where the competition occurred
LineupStart – played entire match
on minute (off player) – substituted on at the minute indicated, and player was substituted off at the same time

off minute (on player) – substituted off at the minute indicated, and player was substituted on at the same time
(c) – captain

MinThe minute in the match the goal was scored. For list that include caps, blank indicates played in the match but did not score a goal.
Assist/passThe ball was passed by the player, which assisted in scoring the goal. This column depends on the availability and source of this information.
penalty or pkGoal scored on penalty-kick which was awarded due to foul by opponent. (Goals scored in penalty-shoot-out, at the end of a tied match after extra-time, are not included.)
ScoreThe match score after the goal was scored.
ResultThe final score.

W – match was won
L – match was lost to opponent
D – match was drawn
(W) – penalty-shoot-out was won after a drawn match
(L) – penalty-shoot-out was lost after a drawn match

aetThe score at the end of extra-time; the match was tied at the end of 90' regulation
psoPenalty-shoot-out score shown in parenthesis; the match was tied at the end of extra-time
Orange background color – Olympic women's football tournament
Blue background color – FIFA women's world cup final tournament
GoalMatchDateLocationOpponentLineupMinScoreResultCompetition
China 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup
1
1991-11-16Guangzhou Norway{{{4}}}.

off 70' (on Zhu Tao)

4–0 W

Group stage
1
2
1991-11-19Guangzhou DenmarkStart37

1–1

2–2 D

Group stage
3
1991-11-21Foshan New ZealandStart

4–1 W

Group stage
4
1991-11-24Guangzhou SwedenStart

0–1 L

Quarter-final
Sweden 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup
2
5
1995-06-06Gävle United StatesStart79

3–3

3–3 D

Group stage
6
1995-06-08Västerås AustraliaStart

4–2 W

Group stage
3
7
1995-06-10Västerås DenmarkStart76

2–1

3–1 W

Group stage
8
1995-06-13Helsingborg SwedenStart

1–1 (pso 4–3) (W)

Quarter-final
9
1995-06-15Helsingborg GermanyStart

0–1 L

Semi-final
10
1995-06-17Gävle United States{{{4}}}.

off 59' (on Wei Haiying)

0–2 L

Third place match
Atlanta 1996 Olympic Women's Football Tournament
11
1996-07-21Miami SwedenStart

2–0 W

Group stage
12
1996-07-23Miami Denmark{{{4}}}.

off 43' (on Chen Yufeng)

5–1 W

Group stage
13
1996-07-25Miami United StatesStart

0–0 D

Group stage
14
1996-07-28Athens GA BrazilStart

3–2 W

Semi-final
4
15
1996-08-01Athens GA United StatesStart32

1–1

1–2 L

Gold medal match
USA 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup
16
1999-06-19San Jose CA Sweden{{{4}}}.

off 74' (on Pu Wei)

2–1 W

Group stage
5
17
1999-06-23Portland OR GhanaStart9

1–0

7–0 W

Group stage
6
21

3–0

7
54

4–0

8
18
1999-06-26E Rutherford NJ Australia{{{4}}}.

off 63' (on Qiu Haiyan)

39

1–0

3–1 W

Group stage
9
51

2–0

19
1999-06-30San Jose CA RussiaStart

2–0 W

Quarter-final
10
20
1999-07-04Boston NorwayStart3

1–0

5–0 W

Semi-final
11
72 pk

5–0

21
1999-07-10Los Angeles United StatesStart

0–0 (pso 4–5) (L)

Final
Sydney 2000 Olympic Women's Football Tournament
12
22
2000-09-14Canberra NigeriaStart57

2–0

3–1 W

Group stage
13
83

3–0

14
23
2000-09-17Melbourne United StatesStart67

1–1

1–1 D

Group stage
15
24
2000-09-20Canberra NorwayStart75

1–1

1–2 L

Group stage
USA 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup
16
25
2003-09-21Carson CA GhanaStart; (c)29

1–0

1–0 W

Group stage
26
2003-09-25Carson CA AustraliaStart; (c)

1–1 D

Group stage
27
2003-09-28Portland OR RussiaStart; (c)

1–0 W

Group stage
28
2003-10-02Portland OR CanadaStart; (c)

0–1 L

Quarter-final

Honors and awards

A strong striker with great skills and passing abilities, Sun won both the Golden Boot (which she shared with Sissi, of Brazil) and the Golden Ball for the 1999 Women's World Cup, and became the first woman to be nominated for the Asian Football Confederation player of the year award.

In 2002, she was received the FIFA Internet Award in the FIFA Female Player of the Century voting. While the overall award was won by American Michelle Akers, Sun received the most internet votes on the FIFA-website.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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